wikipedia.org |
Wednesday, August 29, 2012
I Learned This...
"I learned this, at least, by my experiment; that if one advances confidently in the direction of his dreams, and endeavors to live the life which he has imagined, he will meet with a success unexpected in common hours. He will put some things behind, will pass an invisible boundary; new, universal, and more liberal laws will begin to establish themselves around and within him; or the old laws will be expanded, and interpreted in his favor in a more liberal sense, and he will live with the license of a higher order of beings." - Henry Thoreau
Sunday, August 26, 2012
Home Again
At 1:15 pm, on July 17, 2012, the cargo van pulled up in front of Calle Cabrera. It was scheduled to pickup the couple and their 2 dogs from the Palermo Soho neighborhood of Buenos Aires to the EZE airport. The family had been living on the road a little over a year. Today, they were headed to their final destination, San Francisco, California. Home. The last leg of the journey.
I am in the front seat of the cargo van. Cedric is in the back with the dogs and their crates. We set off with 13 suitcases, now 5 remain. There are no seats in the back of the van, except for two mounds in the rear that mark the outside wheels. Cedric makes a seat on one of those mounds. Roberto, the driver hands me a cherry menthol. He hands it to the back to Cedric. He apologizes; he normally carries cargo, not people. Hopefully, it was clear on the phone when the arrangements were made. Roberto, has curly brown hair and a round buddha belly. Next to the hand break, there is a mate gourd stuffed like a fat cigar – the dry leaves fill the edges of the gourd. As customary, its companion, the thermos in fire engine red sits beside it.
Even though, I am back, something has transformed from within. Something is lost, but I am forever rich in this mystery of change. I am back, but nothing is the same. A new perspective emerges. I begin to see what has always been in front of me - all along.
I am in the front seat of the cargo van. Cedric is in the back with the dogs and their crates. We set off with 13 suitcases, now 5 remain. There are no seats in the back of the van, except for two mounds in the rear that mark the outside wheels. Cedric makes a seat on one of those mounds. Roberto, the driver hands me a cherry menthol. He hands it to the back to Cedric. He apologizes; he normally carries cargo, not people. Hopefully, it was clear on the phone when the arrangements were made. Roberto, has curly brown hair and a round buddha belly. Next to the hand break, there is a mate gourd stuffed like a fat cigar – the dry leaves fill the edges of the gourd. As customary, its companion, the thermos in fire engine red sits beside it.
It hasn’t really hit me that we are going home. It feels like any day, when the mystery of the road beckoned – and we, its pilgrims were guided by the compass of our intuition and the wisdom of our hearts. I don’t want to feel the finality of it, but it seems like something is permanently ending.
Rather than linger in this discomfort, my mind wanders in the world of worry making. I worry about the dogs and their long flight ahead. I worry about Cedric sitting in the back – should he have taken the front seat? I worry if Roberto makes conversation with me - what will I say?
There is an unopened 6-pack of paper towels wedged between my seat and Roberto’s. When the van stops at the red light, a white dog stands over the white paper towels and licks my hand. Roberto, seeing her, strokes her head. Biela says relax.
Roberto's eyes meet mine. He asks about our trip. Insecure, I open my mouth and Cedric’s voice emerges from it. The conversation begins and meanders. The topic is now about the black glaciers of Argentina. And the discussion carries on without me.
I watch the Portenos on the streets. The motion of their bodies – swinging hands and legs, orchestrated like a sidewalk dance. The last look of Buenos Aires. Hazy, busy, congested. 2 1/12 weeks ago, I was in Puerto Madryn walking barefoot on the pebble sand, walking next to whales.
I try and breathe deeply to stay present. But the breath comes in shallow and the out breath even shallower. I’ve been avoiding this feeling since we arrived in Buenos Aires. Loss ruminating on the edges of consciousness.
It started with the hat. I don’t know if it was in Puerto Madryn or somewhere on the road – as we took the course on the Atlantic side of Argentina from Ushuaia. Somewhere in a parking lot, a gas station, a field pit stop, somewhere - I lost my Peruvian hat. It was the only thing I bought as a souvenir of the journey. Stitched with hand spun yarn from the Andes. Shapes of vicunas, triangles, tribes. The color of pink freesias, mountain lakes and plains – the colors of the flowering landscape: earth, fire, water.
I wore it in Lake Titicaca, through the long coast of Chile, Bariloche, El Calafate, Ushuaia….it kept my head and spirit warm.
Then a corrupted hardware drive whipped all the photographs I’d taken on the journey. I have a selection of photos on the blog and there are photos on Cedric’s laptop, but these are his selections. Mine are gone – lost in binary ether.
And then the car we named Boris. Who carried us and protected us inside him. I never thought I’d love an SUV, but I do now. I love that car – every single part of him. Solid, loyal, sound. We drove through sand storms, jungles, streams, fog, desert, ice and the highest point along the Andes. We would have never gone as far as el Fin del Mundo, Ushuaia without that wonderful car.
It’s hard to see beyond the loss when you’re in it. Dead leaves over delicate grass. No drink or sleep can cure it. Only complete and total acceptance.
How to end a chapter and begin anew?
Back in San Francisco, only 2 days after we land, at a gathering, a friend asks me about the trips’ highlights. I take a sip of red wine then start recounting the places, midway – there is a long pause, then complete silence. I don’t know what to say…
Words sink into sand. I’m already forgetting the names of the places. I am forgetting, the details of the trip...the hat, photos, the car and now the memory slipping into a hidden place where I can no longer access.
Where did they go? All those wonderful experiences when facts are forgotten? Like the sound of the morning bells in San Miguel de Allende – not like a rounded cathedral bell, but with a clank, that lovely clank of a ball inside a can. Or the canons that boomed with certainty, marking a celebration, a special day named after the saints. Or the color of the sunrise on the pampas en route to El Calafate, as the sun streamed upon the gloss of a golden fleece on the horizon. The circling of a solitary condor while trekking on the glacier of Perito Moreno. The sauna heat of midday cooled by the ocean breeze on your calves walking along Playa Hermosa, the beaches of Santa Teresa. Or the time when you are so lonely, you cry out to the Spirit above, and a green lizard emerges next to you in a tree. Crossing the path of a turtle on New Year’s day, on her way to lay her eggs. Waking up to the sight of a volcano or writing morning pages under the gaze of La Virgin del Panecillo.
Some things are encoded in experience, not revealed in words alone.
We are back at the pink cottage – our refuge before we left on the journey a year ago. It is part of our reentry. For the next 2 weeks, we stay here until we find a home again. We have made a full circle like the ouroboro, the ancient symbol of a snake or dragon eating its own tail representing the cycle of change. The eternal return.
wikipedia.org |
Even though, I am back, something has transformed from within. Something is lost, but I am forever rich in this mystery of change. I am back, but nothing is the same. A new perspective emerges. I begin to see what has always been in front of me - all along.
I do some grocery shopping at the Castro. The cashier has on black eyeliner and smiles, in that flamboyant Castro way. “Your hair, I love it!” While, carding me for the sparkling wine. “Good work!” He says when he sees the birth year. Something I used to loathe, the whole IDing ordeal now I actually don’t mind. In fact, I like the little exchange. “Work it!!” He says as he bags my items. “Have a good night, sweetie.” I wish him a good night too and step out into the open streets, the smell of bay water mixed with marshmallow clouds.
I would have overlooked this exchange in my old life. Such delight and energy. Mystery. Vibrancy. There is a couple walking in front of me. The man hands the woman a purple dildo. For some reason, this is hilarious to me and I start laughing hysterically. In religious Latin America, you would never, ever see such an open exchange in broad day light. And the old me would have surely judged this act, condemned it even. But now, now it’s wonderful. Unexpected, outrageous, perfect. It’s perfect. Everything is the way it should be. And so I begin to realize, how grateful I am for the rainbow flag, the Castro that is audacious enough to exist. I see its magic and I am grateful - to see beyond the purple dildo!
We are walking up Kite Hill. The tree that fell over a year ago is no longer there. Biela looks like May West, her white fur blows against the wind. Manly plants his wet brown nose amidst bushes. A gossamer of fog surrounds the city momentarily. Then a strong wind blows it away and reveals her lovely face. There she is – my City by the Bay. I love you, I shout to the Zephyrs. I love you San Francisco. Thank you for loving me back!
view of the city from kite hill |
Wednesday, August 22, 2012
On Words
"All my life I've looked at words as though I were seeing them for the first time." - Ernest Hemingway
vagobond.com |
Monday, August 20, 2012
On Parking and the Dalai Lama
On Saturday, I drive to the Ferry Building to meet a friend.
Ask anyone in the city, and they’ll tell you how crazy parking can be during
this time – especially, on a warm cloudless day – the sun, a bouquet of
marigolds. Imagine a link of cars strewn like sausages along the Embarcadero, the
familiar patchwork of tourists stamped on sidewalks - socializing, shopping,
sunbathing. It’s a typical day on the tourist side of San Francisco.
Long pause that feels like a century.
"Thank you!" Big smile beaming brighter than fireworks.
Ps Gratitude and thanks to Jeannie Zukav!!
Luckily, I know of a secret parking place only a block away
from the Ferry Building - the Golden G Tennis Club (one of the perks, when I
was a member). Minor detail: I’m no longer a member and therefore, not technically entitled to park here anymore.
However, it doesn’t
hurt to just drive by - have a quick look, the mind taunts. I mean, I’m
just looking like anyone and everyone – even if there is a big sign with words
like club members only and tow away under penalty.
So, given this information, how does it happen that I find
myself in the GG parking lot, amidst parking spaces aplenty? Then crawl in, so
naturally into a perfectly usable parking space like it is meant to be?
I close the door and speed walk, then awkwardly march with head
on feet, to freedom.
I fake my way to the club entrance – then slyly turn the
opposite direction to the Ferry Building. I pass a man with glasses; taking an
awfully long time to feed the parking meter. Coin. Drop. Clink. Coin. Drop. Clink....
The coast is clear. The Ferry Building is in my horizon.
EXCEPT for the life of me, did I remember to lock the door?
I turn around, speed walk, then casually inch closer
to the parking lot and using the remote control key like a wand, try and lock
the door from a bush.
EXCEPT, a damn car rolls up
and blocks my line.
This is crazy Mai. You
did lock the door, my mind keeps reassuring me. Just turn around and walk away.
EXCEPT, I don’t fully trust myself and what my mind is
saying.
I walk up ever so cool-like to the car, open the door, then assume the ostrich position hiding its head into the seat. I close the door, lock it twice
and then speed walk/stroll casually away. Double fake directions, then turn
around and cross the street toward the Ferry Building. The coast is clear. Easy.
EXCEPT, my mind starts projecting into the future. What if I
the club finds out. What if I come back, discover the car has been towed away and the only way to get it back is to hire one of those pedicabs, that I'm seeing more in the city. And we'll need to stop by the ATM first, because I don't have enough money to pay the exorbitant fine. What if…
My body stiffens. A razor pinch ruptures on the neck and shoulders.
It’s now 20 minutes since I’ve parked the car. And I’m still playing tug of war with myself. This doesn’t feel good or wise. I try and remember a quote
from the Dalai Lama that was recently and beautiful shared with me. Something
about the heart and the mind. About being divided inside – the war inside. The
heart will never understand why the mind will try to rationalize.
The man with glasses who was feeding the meter earlier,
passes me and smiles.
I stop dead in my tracks. Remember to breathe deeply. And I
ask my heart. What do I feel? What do I do?
Move the car!
For the third time, I walk back to the car. Start the engine
and pull out. As I leave the parking lot, a car moves out of a parking space on
the sidewalk. I take the space. I
step out, feeling content and peaceful and look for the meter. There is no
meter. A bike cop rides next to me and tells me that he’s seen people park in
this spot; he explains that there is no parking meter, he can’t fine me, but I
would need to talk to someone at the club to find out if it’s ok for me to park
here since the space is right in front of the club’s drive way. Fair enough. I
thank the cop, walk to the reception desk and ask if I can park in the space
right next to the driveway.
“Are you a member?”
“No…..but I was.”
Long pause that feels like a century.
“For today, you can park there.”
"Thank you!" Big smile beaming brighter than fireworks.
Realization – when I divide and separate my mind and heart, I feel worry, anxiety and doubt. Harmony is the alignment of the heart, head and voice. Be still, present, listen to the heart – it knows best.
Here’s the story/quote from the Dalai Lama:
At the end of a talk someone from the audience
asks the
Dalai Lama about war. The
Dalai Lama looks down, says with a gentle smile, "Well, war is obsolete, you know "
Then, after a few moments,
"Of course the mind
can rationalize
fighting back...but the heart, the heart would never
understand.
Then you would be divided in yourself, the heart and the mind,
and
the war would be inside you."
guardian.co.uk |
Ps Gratitude and thanks to Jeannie Zukav!!
Monday, August 13, 2012
Billboards on the Panamericana
simply impeccable
Puerto Vallarta, Mexico |
DirecTV - comes with sheep
Enroute to Cuenca, Ecuador |
Mary does social media
Enroute to San Miguel, Mexico |
candy, it's iso 9001 certified
Enroute to Oaxaca, Mexico |
when the billboard needs implants
Enroute to Oaxaca, Mexico |
faga motors, king long...yes, this is real...
Enroute to Lima, Peru |
mega silkey smooth
Ushuaia, Argentina |
oh dear...
Enroute to Guadalajara, Mexico |
Wednesday, August 01, 2012
Ich Komme Aus Meinen Schwingen Heim
By Rainier Maria Rilke
I come home from the soaring
in which I lost myself
I was song, and the refrain which is God
is still roaring in my ears.
Now I am still
and plain;
no more words.
To the others I was like the wind:
I made them shake.
I'd gone very far, as far as the angels,
and high, where light thins into nothing.
But deep in the darkness is God.
I come home from the soaring
in which I lost myself
I was song, and the refrain which is God
is still roaring in my ears.
Now I am still
and plain;
no more words.
To the others I was like the wind:
I made them shake.
I'd gone very far, as far as the angels,
and high, where light thins into nothing.
But deep in the darkness is God.
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